Jesus lays down amazing promises about the power of asking things from God. He promises to answer. You can check out Thursday’s post if you’d like to see a few of those commitments. Bottom line: God puts himself on the line to deliver what we pray for!<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
God “puts himself on the line”!!! By Ogum! God may even step up to the plate to deliver on these prayers. Count me in, there’s loads of things I’d like to ask for.<\/p>\n
No wait, there is small print. “conditions.”<\/p>\n
One of which is, bizarrely, that “Jesus makes prayer a corporate matter.” <\/p>\n
I am in awe at this 21st century god. He doesn’t just have a net connection. He is also a CEO. <\/p>\n
Ah, it seems to mean he answers prayers by volume. <\/p>\n
Effective requests come to God as petitions with more than one signature attached. <\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Look, he’s a busy guy, right? He can’t be expected to pay attention to the fall of a single sparrow or anything, in a world with 6 billion human beings. He needs lots of voices clamouring for him to do something before he’ll bother to put himself on the line. (That’s why your single prayer for the regrowth of your amputated limb failed, fool.)<\/p>\n
There were previous conditions: “asking” (Well duh, if you don’t ask, you don’t get. Surely you didn’t think your god was omniscient enough to know that you wouldn’t welcome that bankruptcy?) and “faith.”<\/p>\n
Which has a strangely instrumentalist meaning:<\/p>\n
Faith as the Bible defines it is an action based on a conviction that something promised with be delivered, even before any evidence appears that it will be so. <\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Is this a new consumerist adaptation of Christianity? Guaranteed delivery, even if you don’t actually get the thing you ordered.<\/p>\n
The god-of-abraham as a giant e-commerce application? <\/p>\n
According to the Times, <\/p>\n
Worries about the ethics of these sites are further fuelled by the existence of some which charge for intecessionary prayer, offering a ‘call-centre’ style service.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Bang up to the minute, again, god-of-abraham. <\/p>\n
What’s the betting that he’s outsourced the whole god business to some Indian call-centre? There must be enough gods in the Hindu pantheon to service the current global demand for divine intervention. <\/p>\n
And the god-of-abraham is sunning himself on the beach at some Red Sea resort with a fast internet connection. <\/p>\n